The maps on this page illustrate the location of regions that might be vulnerable
to very large amounts of sea level rise. They simply show, with blue shading, those
regions whose average elevation is within 10m (or 20m, 30m, etc.) of the current
sea level, and thus might be permanently inundated if average sea level were to rise
by 10m (or 20m, 30m, etc.).

Some caveats must be noted:

Even the lowest amount of sea level rise shown here (10m) is far above
the range of projections estimated by the IPCC for the 21st century (which
has a maximum of less than 1m). Thus these maps are not likely to be relevant
unless you are interested in projections far beyond the 21st century, or if
the IPCC projections are greatly exceeded by much more rapid melt of the
major ice sheets.

Any grid box whose average elevation falls within the given sea level rise
is shaded blue, regardless of whether it has a direct connection with the open
sea or whether it would be protected from permanent inundation by coastal
flood defences.

These images may be used only if Tim Osborn is acknowledged as the originator
and copyright holder.

The small images show just part of Europe. Click on any image to obtain the global
map.

Images for southern Asia.

These images may be used only if Tim Osborn is acknowledged as the originator
and copyright holder.